The open living room, eat-in kitchen and half-bathroom make up the left side of the first floor. The master suite takes up the right side. Upstairs are two bedrooms, a shared bathroom and a game room.

A quartz counter with bar-stool seating merges the living room with the kitchen. The kitchen's counters stay low, allowing for plenty of storage without blocking the view of the living room.

The kitchen offers room for a small table as well as a pantry. The kitchen follows the home's color scheme of sage green and gray. Both the kitchen and living area feature white porcelain tile with an alligator pattern. Multiple windows in the living room add light .

Double doors open to the porch and the lot's long back field. A carport could be converted to a backyard pavilion. Thurman gave it a Hill Country look with corrugated metal roof.

The master suite has matching double doors that open to the back patio. A high window above the bed adds to the light-filled room.

The bathroom offers gray porcelain tile in a tapestry pattern that goes up the tub wall as well as rests on the floor. The walk-in shower and tub are united by a half wall. The shower offers a pebble floor. High windows on this wall bring in light to the room. The double vanity is the same gray quartz counter with sage cabinets as the kitchen. The bathroom leads to the larger of the suite's two walk-in closets.

Upstairs, the stairwell offers vertical windows that bring in light on two sides. The ceiling here is elevated for interesting angles. The game room provides a closet and the entrance to the laundry room. The laundry room has space for cabinets to be added.

The upstairs bedrooms provide ample closet space as well as interesting architectural details. One has two corner windows; the other has an elevated ceiling and a large window.

The shared bathroom provides the same tapestry gray tile with a shower/bath.

Rooker calls the home a "warm modern." "It's not a hospital," he says. "The green color softens it, and the geometry is very smooth, not stark. There's not sharp lines, but there are angles."

The home has been looked at by young couples and empty nesters. The expected buyer is a middle-aged single woman.

Thurman Homes expects to build a similar, slightly larger home across the street.

nvillalpando@statesman.com; 912-5900

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